A couple days ago a video popped up on my YouTube feed. It was a review of a battery powered tire pump that fits in the palm of your hand. The reviewer is a respected influencer in this area, but I didn't care because I was happy with the pump I have, a OneUp EDC.
Much of my riding is bareback: No Camelbak, no hip pack. I enjoy the freedom. On these rides I carry a water bottle in the downtube-mounted cage. Tools are in a OneUp EDC tool kit in the steerer tube. My pump is a OneUp EDC, as well. It holds a CO2 cartridge and a small plug kit. It's GREAT to ride without the burden of a pack. I love this setup.
I can't mount the EDC pump in the normal configuration, as my downtube is too wide. This bike, however, has mounting screws on the bottom side of the top tube. I mounted the OneUP EDC Pump Bracket there. It seemed to work fine... until yesterday.
I was flying down a particularly chunky rock garden when I heard a BANG! CRASH! I thought I must have kicked up an unusually large boulder. I looked down, and my pump was missing. Uh, oh. I turned around, and my pump was about 50 feet back. It turns out, the bracket snapped under the repeated stress of banging down the rock gardens. It's a phenomenon known to OneUp, but they claim the brackets break from riders' knee pads. But I wasn't wearing knee pads. The brackets just can't take the abuse of rough riding. I'd like to add that the brackets seem to work ok if you mount them on the downtube, where they're better supported.
I didn't want to order another bracket, as it would surely break again, possibly at an inopportune time. It was then that I remembered the video about the electric pump. I looked it up, and the product is called a CYCPLUS. Why not? I ordered one. It was delivered this morning. It seems to pump up tires just fine. Reported longevity seems good. I also ordered a now tool pouch that I can bolt onto the bike. The pouch will hold the CYCPLUS, a tublito, and hopefully a small plug kit. I think this will solve my problem.
I'd like to say that I'll report back on how the CYCPLUS works. But hopefully I'll never need to use it.
Much of my riding is bareback: No Camelbak, no hip pack. I enjoy the freedom. On these rides I carry a water bottle in the downtube-mounted cage. Tools are in a OneUp EDC tool kit in the steerer tube. My pump is a OneUp EDC, as well. It holds a CO2 cartridge and a small plug kit. It's GREAT to ride without the burden of a pack. I love this setup.
I can't mount the EDC pump in the normal configuration, as my downtube is too wide. This bike, however, has mounting screws on the bottom side of the top tube. I mounted the OneUP EDC Pump Bracket there. It seemed to work fine... until yesterday.
I was flying down a particularly chunky rock garden when I heard a BANG! CRASH! I thought I must have kicked up an unusually large boulder. I looked down, and my pump was missing. Uh, oh. I turned around, and my pump was about 50 feet back. It turns out, the bracket snapped under the repeated stress of banging down the rock gardens. It's a phenomenon known to OneUp, but they claim the brackets break from riders' knee pads. But I wasn't wearing knee pads. The brackets just can't take the abuse of rough riding. I'd like to add that the brackets seem to work ok if you mount them on the downtube, where they're better supported.
I didn't want to order another bracket, as it would surely break again, possibly at an inopportune time. It was then that I remembered the video about the electric pump. I looked it up, and the product is called a CYCPLUS. Why not? I ordered one. It was delivered this morning. It seems to pump up tires just fine. Reported longevity seems good. I also ordered a now tool pouch that I can bolt onto the bike. The pouch will hold the CYCPLUS, a tublito, and hopefully a small plug kit. I think this will solve my problem.
I'd like to say that I'll report back on how the CYCPLUS works. But hopefully I'll never need to use it.